Akanthos Capital Management, LLC v. Atlanticus Holdings Corporation ( 2013 )


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  •                Case: 12-13467        Date Filed: 10/28/2013      Page: 1 of 23
    [PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    ________________________
    No. 12-13467
    ________________________
    D.C. Docket No. 1:10-cv-00844-TCB
    AKANTHOS CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, LLC,
    CNH CA MASTER ACCOUNT, L.P., et al.,
    Plaintiffs–Appellees,
    versus
    ATLANTICUS HOLDINGS CORPORATION,
    Defendant–Appellant.
    ________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Georgia
    _______________________
    (October 28, 2013)
    Before PRYOR and BLACK, Circuit Judges, and RESTANI, ∗ Judge.
    PER CURIAM:
    ∗
    Honorable Jane A. Restani, Judge for the United States Court of International Trade, sitting by
    designation.
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    This appeal presents an issue that has already been fully litigated, and res
    judicata bars relitigation of that issue. The antitrust counterclaim of Atlanticus
    Holdings Corporation, formerly CompuCredit, against Akanthos Capital
    Management and twenty other hedge funds is identical to the complaint of
    Atlanticus in another antitrust lawsuit between the same parties. The district court
    dismissed the complaint in the other lawsuit, and we affirmed that dismissal by an
    equally divided vote of the en banc Court. CompuCredit Holdings Corp. v.
    Akanthos Capital Mgmt., LLC, 
    916 F. Supp. 2d 1326
    , 1329–32 (N.D. Ga. 2011),
    aff’d, 
    698 F.3d 1348
    , 1349 (11th Cir. 2012) (en banc). The district court dismissed
    the counterclaim in this action for the same reason that it dismissed the complaint
    in the other one. When the other lawsuit was pending before the en banc Court,
    Atlanticus moved to consolidate the appeals in the two actions because they
    presented an identical issue, but we denied that motion and instead stayed this
    appeal. But Atlanticus was correct about the identical nature of these actions, and
    res judicata bars Atlanticus from relitigating this matter. We affirm the dismissal
    of the counterclaims of Atlanticus, but we deny the motion for fees and costs filed
    by the hedge funds.
    I. BACKGROUND
    Deciding this appeal demands a review of the procedural history of not only
    this lawsuit, but the other lawsuit that our en banc Court decided earlier. This
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    lawsuit began when the hedge funds, as noteholders, sued Atlanticus in 2009 to
    enjoin an allegedly fraudulent transfer. Atlanticus then filed its own lawsuit
    against the noteholders in which it alleged that the noteholders had violated
    section 1 of the Sherman Act when they filed this allegedly “sham” lawsuit,
    boycotted the company’s tender offer, and engaged in price fixing. Both lawsuits
    were transferred to the district court and assigned to the same judge. In an
    interlocutory appeal, we ordered the district court to dismiss the complaint filed by
    the noteholders. Akanthos Capital Mgmt., LLC v. CompuCredit Holdings Corp.,
    
    677 F.3d 1286
    , 1298 (11th Cir. 2012). Our decision would have ended this lawsuit
    except that, while the interlocutory appeal was pending, Atlanticus answered the
    noteholders’ complaint and incorporated by reference the complaint from its
    lawsuit against the noteholders. The district court construed this pleading as a
    counterclaim under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 8(c). The noteholders moved
    to dismiss the counterclaim on the ground that Atlanticus was attempting to obtain
    discovery that the district court had denied in its other lawsuit against the
    noteholders. The noteholders did not mention the doctrine of res judicata as the
    antitrust claim had not yet been adjudicated, but they acknowledged the parallel
    litigation in their motion to dismiss.
    The district court then dismissed both the antitrust complaint and the
    antitrust counterclaim filed by Atlanticus in the separate actions. On June 16,
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    2011, the district court issued a minute entry stating, “The Court will be issuing an
    order dismissing the Anti-Trust claim.” On the same day, the noteholders filed a
    reply in support of their motion to dismiss the counterclaim. In their reply, they
    acknowledged the minute entry and urged the district court to dismiss the
    counterclaim because the antitrust claim was identical. On June 17, 2011, the
    district court dismissed the antitrust lawsuit filed by Atlanticus. CompuCredit
    Holdings Corp. v. Akanthos Capital Mgmt., LLC, 
    916 F. Supp. 2d 1326
    , 1329–32
    (N.D. Ga. 2011). On November 8, 2011, the district court dismissed the antitrust
    counterclaim in this lawsuit.
    Atlanticus appealed the dismissal of its antitrust lawsuit against the
    noteholders. A panel of this Court affirmed the dismissal of the antitrust lawsuit,
    CompuCredit Holdings Corp. v. Akanthos Capital Mgmt., LLC, 
    661 F.3d 1312
    ,
    1315 (11th Cir. 2011), but we later vacated that decision and granted a rehearing
    en banc. CompuCredit Holdings Corp. v. Akanthos Capital Mgmt., LLC, 
    677 F.3d 1042
    , 1043 (11th Cir. 2012). After we granted the rehearing en banc, Atlanticus
    filed a notice of appeal in this action to appeal the dismissal of its counterclaim.
    Atlanticus moved to consolidate the en banc appeal and this appeal because
    “[t]he sole issue” in both appeals was “identical.” The noteholders did not oppose
    the motion to consolidate the appeals. We denied the motion and stayed this
    appeal pending the en banc decision.
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    Sitting en banc, we affirmed the dismissal of the antitrust complaint against
    the noteholders. CompuCredit Holdings Corp. v. Akanthos Capital Mgmt., LLC,
    
    698 F.3d 1348
    , 1349 (11th Cir. 2012) (en banc). We affirmed without an opinion
    because the en banc court was evenly divided. Id.; see United States v. Geders,
    
    585 F.2d 1303
    , 1305–06 (5th Cir. 1978) (en banc). After the en banc ruling, we
    ordered the parties to submit briefs for this appeal, and one month later, the
    noteholders moved to dismiss this appeal based on res judicata.
    II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    We review a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim de novo. Timson
    v. Sampson, 
    518 F.3d 870
    , 872 (11th Cir. 2008). We may affirm a judgment based
    on any grounds supported by the record. Molinos Valle Del Cibao, C. por A. v.
    Lama, 
    633 F.3d 1330
    , 1349 n.20 (11th Cir. 2011).
    III. DISCUSSION
    We divide our discussion in two parts. First, we explain that res judicata
    bars Atlanticus from pursuing this appeal. Second, we deny the noteholders’
    motion for fees and costs under Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 38.
    A. Res Judicata Bars this Action.
    Res judicata bars Atlanticus from obtaining relief in this action. Atlanticus
    litigated the identical complaint against the same parties in another action, and this
    Court affirmed the dismissal of that complaint. See CompuCredit Holdings Corp.,
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    23 698 F.3d at 1349
    . When a judgment is rendered for the defendant, the plaintiff’s
    claim is extinguished; res judicata bars the plaintiff from relitigating that same
    claim against the same defendant. See Jaffree v. Wallace, 
    837 F.2d 1461
    , 1466–67
    (11th Cir. 1988) (stating that finality for purposes of res judicata is when the
    district court issues its judgment); see also 18 Charles Alan Wright & Arthur R.
    Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 4402 (2d ed. 2002).
    Atlanticus argues that the noteholders waived their defense of res judicata,
    but we disagree. Although a party can waive its defense of res judicata if it fails to
    plead the defense, 18 Wright & 
    Miller, supra
    , at § 4405, the noteholders raised the
    defense at the earliest opportunity. The antitrust lawsuit continued until June 20,
    2011, when the district court entered its judgment on the pleadings. Five months
    passed between that judgment and the dismissal of the counterclaim in this action,
    but on June 16, 2011, immediately after the noteholders learned that the district
    court intended to dismiss the other lawsuit, the noteholders filed a reply in support
    of their motion to dismiss the counterclaim in this lawsuit. Their reply did not
    include the magic words “res judicata,” but it clearly stated that, because the
    district court planned to dismiss the antitrust lawsuit, it must necessarily dismiss
    the counterclaim in this lawsuit too. As soon as the en banc court affirmed the
    dismissal of the other lawsuit and the stay was lifted in this appeal, the noteholders
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    raised the defense of res judicata. Given these overlapping events, the noteholders
    did not waive their defense of res judicata.
    Even if the noteholders had not raised their defense of res judicata, we
    would sua sponte raise the issue. See, e.g., Shurick v. Boeing Co., 
    623 F.3d 1114
    ,
    1116 & n.2 (11th Cir. 2010). No prejudice results from our dismissal of this
    appeal because Atlanticus has already fully and fairly litigated the identical
    complaint. And if the Court were to fail to raise the issue of res judicata, then we
    would threaten the public interest in avoiding judicial waste and inconsistent
    judgments. See Arizona v. California, 
    530 U.S. 392
    , 412–13, 
    120 S. Ct. 2304
    ,
    2318 (2000) (“This result is fully consistent with the policies underlying res
    judicata: it is not based solely on the defendant’s interest in avoiding the burdens
    of twice defending a suit, but is also based on the avoidance of unnecessary
    judicial waste.” (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting United States v. Sioux
    Nation of Indians, 
    448 U.S. 371
    , 432, 
    100 S. Ct. 2716
    , 2749 (1980) (Rehnquist, J.,
    dissenting))); see also Gilbert v. Ferry, 
    413 F.3d 578
    , 579–80 (6th Cir. 2005);
    Clements v. Airport Auth. of Washoe Cnty., 
    69 F.3d 321
    , 329–30 (9th Cir. 1995).
    B. We Deny the Noteholders’ Motion for Fees and Costs.
    We reject the noteholders’ request that we award fees and costs under
    Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 38, which provides that “[i]f a court of
    appeals determines that an appeal is frivolous, it may, after a separately filed
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    motion or notice from the court and reasonable opportunity to respond, award just
    damages and single or double costs to the appellee.” Fed. R. App. P. 38. In this
    appeal, Atlanticus attempted to consolidate the appeals, but we denied its motion.
    Perhaps Atlanticus should have voluntarily dismissed its appeal after the en banc
    Court ruled, but its failure to do so in this circumstance should not subject it to
    paying fees and costs under Rule 38.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    We AFFIRM the dismissal of the antitrust counterclaim on the ground that
    it is barred by res judicata. We DENY as moot the noteholders’ motion to dismiss
    this appeal and DENY the noteholders’ motion for fees and costs.
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    PRYOR, Circuit Judge, concurring specially:
    I join fully in the opinion of the majority. I write separately to explain why
    the novel antitrust counterclaim that Atlanticus filed in this action fails as a matter
    of law. I served on both the panel that affirmed the dismissal of the complaint that
    Atlanticus filed in the other lawsuit and the en banc Court that affirmed the
    dismissal by an equally divided vote. My perspective on this issue has not
    changed. When noteholders negotiate collectively with the issuer of debt, their
    collective activity is not per se illegal because it is procompetitive. Coordination
    among existing creditors “is commonly in the interests of all parties.” Sharon Steel
    Corp. v. Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A., 
    691 F.2d 1039
    , 1052 (2d Cir. 1982).
    I. BACKGROUND
    In 2005 CompuCredit, now Atlanticus Holdings Corporation, issued two
    series of convertible senior notes. One series matures in 2025 and the other in
    2035, and holders of the 2025 notes had a put option to require Atlanticus to
    repurchase some or all of their notes in 2012. Twenty-one hedge funds
    individually purchased the notes on the secondary market. When this dispute
    began, these noteholders owned a combined share of roughly 70 percent of the
    notes.
    This dispute began in 2009 when Atlanticus announced a $25 million
    dividend and a tentative plan to spin off the company’s profitable microloan
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    business. The noteholders sued to enjoin the dividend and any proposed spin-off
    on the ground that those actions would constitute fraudulent transfers by rendering
    Atlanticus insolvent. The district court denied the noteholders’ motion for a
    preliminary injunction, and Atlanticus issued the dividend.
    After it issued the dividend, Atlanticus made a tender offer to repurchase
    some of its notes before the notes matured. The company offered to purchase up to
    $160 million in face value of the notes at a price it stated was “equal to, or slightly
    above, then-existing market prices.” Some accepted the offer, but the noteholders
    in this appeal chose not to tender their notes.
    As this matter proceeded in the district court, the noteholders collectively
    offered to sell back the notes at par value, an amount in excess of the price at
    which the notes were trading on the secondary market. The noteholders later
    stated that they would have been willing to negotiate a lower price between 65 and
    70 percent of par value and that their offer was an attempt to settle this lawsuit.
    Atlanticus alleges that the noteholders committed a per se violation of the
    Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1, when they engaged in a conspiracy to force the
    company to repurchase its notes at inflated prices. Atlanticus argues that the
    noteholders’ rejection of its tender offer was a “group boycott” and that the
    noteholders’ joint offer to sell the notes was “price fixing.” Atlanticus also argues
    that this lawsuit was a sham and part of the conspiracy to force the company to buy
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    back its notes. Atlanticus argues that, after initiating this matter, the noteholders
    purchased more notes and that these later purchases prove this lawsuit was a sham.
    Finally, Atlanticus alleges that the noteholders communicated with the company’s
    auditor, the Securities and Exchange Commission, and the indenture trustee about
    the failing financial condition of the company. Atlanticus argues that these
    communications could only have been for the purpose of furthering the
    noteholders’ conspiracy.
    II. DISCUSSION
    It was not per se illegal for the noteholders collectively to renegotiate the
    debt they owned. The noteholders’ activity was neither price fixing nor a group
    boycott. Both the tender offer in January 2010 and the noteholders’ offer in March
    2010 were attempts to secure the debt that the noteholders already owned. These
    negotiations are procompetitive and cannot constitute a per se violation of the
    Sherman Act.
    A per se violation of the Sherman Act is so “plainly anticompetitive” and
    “so often lack[s] any redeeming virtue” that it is “conclusively presumed illegal
    without further examination under the rule of reason generally applied in Sherman
    Act cases.” Broad. Music, Inc. v. Columbia Broad. Sys., Inc., 
    441 U.S. 1
    , 7–8, 
    99 S. Ct. 1551
    , 1556 (1979). The Supreme Court has explained that most price fixing
    agreements are per se illegal, but the Court has cautioned that defining a per se
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    price fixing conspiracy is “not a question simply of determining whether two or
    more potential competitors have literally ‘fixed’ a ‘price.’” 
    Id. at 8–9,
    99 S. Ct. at
    1556–57. For example, a law firm literally engages in market division and “price
    fixing” when it brings together lawyers and sets the price of each lawyer’s
    services. The firm is not “plainly anticompetitive” and without “redeeming
    virtue,” but instead offers the services of its attorneys in a more efficient way. See
    Robert H. Bork, The Antitrust Paradox: A Policy at War with Itself 265 (1978);
    see also Broad. 
    Music, 441 U.S. at 9
    , 99 S. Ct. at 1557.
    The group efforts of the noteholders were not per se illegal because they
    were neither “plainly anticompetitive” nor “lack[ing] any redeeming virtue,”
    Broad. 
    Music, 441 U.S. at 7
    –8, 99 S. Ct. at 1556. Our sister circuits have already
    acknowledged the procompetitive nature of collective action by creditors to secure
    outstanding debt. See United Airlines, Inc. v. U.S. Bank N.A., 
    406 F.3d 918
    , 921
    (7th Cir. 2005); Sharon 
    Steel, 691 F.2d at 1052
    . I agree with their reasoning.
    Atlanticus attempts to distinguish the decisions of our sister circuits on the
    ground that its notes are actively traded on the secondary market, but that argument
    fails for two reasons. First, this controversy involved only the noteholders and the
    issuer of the notes. As between these parties, the notes were not for sale on the
    secondary market; they were in the hands of the noteholders. The noteholders had
    already competed against one another in the secondary market when they
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    purchased the notes, United 
    Airlines, 406 F.3d at 921
    , and they need not continue
    to compete against one another to ensure that the debt they purchased will be
    repaid. Second, the group of noteholders did not distort the secondary market
    because they did not act exclusively as a group; any individual noteholder could
    leave the group and individually resell its debt to Atlanticus or sell it on the
    secondary market.
    A. The Noteholders Are in a Preexisting Creditor-Debtor Relationship with
    Atlanticus.
    Atlanticus argues that the noteholders were not legally entitled to sell their
    notes at a certain price and that the district court conflated the legal relationship
    between buyers and sellers of unmatured notes with the legal relationship between
    debtors and creditors of matured notes, but that argument fails. The allegedly
    anticompetitive activity in this appeal involved negotiating with the debt issuer, not
    buyers on the secondary market. In its brief, Atlanticus attempts to portray itself as
    a player in the secondary market as follows: “[T]he alleged conspiracy . . . was
    about the price at which admitted horizontal competitors would sell their notes on a
    competitive secondary market [in which] CompuCredit participated as a buyer, not
    a debtor.” But Atlanticus is neither a buyer nor seller in the secondary market; it is
    the debt issuer.
    Atlanticus cannot be both the debt issuer and a buyer in the secondary
    market where its notes are bought and sold. When a debt holder offers to sell the
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    debt he owns to a buyer on the secondary market, the two parties have no
    relationship before or after the sale of that note, even if the buyer accepts the
    seller’s offer. But when a debt holder negotiates to sell his note back to the debt
    issuer, the two parties have a preexisting relationship leading up to the offer. The
    debt holder has depended on the issuer’s solvency; the debt holder receives
    periodic interest payments from the issuer; and the issuer has far more information
    about the value of its debt than any buyer on the secondary market. If the debt
    issuer rejects the debt holder’s offer to sell now, the debt issuer retains its
    obligation to repurchase the note when it matures. And if the debt issuer
    extinguishes its debt by accepting the debt holder’s offer, the issuer does not then
    receive interest payments from itself. Atlanticus is not a buyer in the secondary
    market.
    Atlanticus and the noteholders were in a debtor-creditor relationship before
    the noteholders’ collective activity began. Each hedge fund individually purchased
    the debt on the secondary market. The hedge funds did not purchase the debt as a
    group; they acted together only after the debt was purchased to ensure that they
    would be paid when the debt matured. See Falstaff Brewing Corp. v. N.Y. Life
    Ins. Co., 
    513 F. Supp. 289
    , 293 (N.D. Cal. 1978) (“[The defendants] were not
    competing with the banks or other institutions to offer or to supply Falstaff with
    more credit, but were attempting to secure that credit which they had already
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    extended, the terms of which had already been negotiated. This is in fact the very
    opposite of price-fixing.”). The parties are in a preexisting debtor-creditor
    relationship, and the noteholders have rights that they can exercise against
    Atlanticus because Atlanticus is the debt issuer. When Atlanticus offered to
    repurchase its notes, the noteholders had the right to continue a buy-and-hold
    strategy and await the 2012 put option or the 2025 and 2035 maturity dates. And
    when the noteholders proposed a repurchase of the debt, Atlanticus was free to
    accept their offer, make a counteroffer, or walk away.
    Coordination among existing creditors “is commonly in the interests of all
    parties.” Sharon 
    Steel, 691 F.2d at 1052
    ; see also Marcel Kahan & Edward Rock,
    Hedge Fund Activism in the Enforcement of Bondholder Rights, 103 Nw. U. L.
    Rev. 281 (2009) (examining the superior monitoring power of hedge funds that
    hold corporate debt compared to indenture trustees). In Sharon Steel, Judge
    Winter highlighted the value of creditors acting jointly: If creditors can mutually
    refinance the debt they hold, then it maximizes the repayment for all, gives the
    debtor a chance at survival, avoids bankruptcy, and reduces the cost of borrowing
    going 
    forward. 691 F.2d at 1052
    . But if creditors are forced to act individually,
    then each creditor is “compelled to resort to the most extreme action available in
    order to protect its individual interest.” 
    Id. Carried to
    this extreme, creditors could
    force acceleration of repayment on a bond and ultimately drive the debtor to
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    bankruptcy. Because coordination is in the interest of both creditors and debtors,
    coordination is not anticompetitive. In United Airlines, Judge Easterbrook
    explained that “[c]ompetition comes at the time loans are 
    made,” 406 F.3d at 921
    ,
    or, in this appeal, when the debt was purchased on the secondary market. Creditors
    who later cooperate “in an effort to collect as much as possible of the amounts due
    under competitively determined contracts” are not engaged in “the sort of activity
    with which the antitrust laws are concerned.” 
    Id. The decisions
    in Sharon Steel and United Airlines, which also involved
    preexisting debtor-creditor relationships, are instructive. In Sharon Steel, the
    debtor announced plans to liquidate the 
    company. 691 F.2d at 1045
    –46. In
    response, the creditors collectively demanded that the debtor pay off its debt within
    thirty days or set aside cash to secure the debt. 
    Id. After the
    liquidation, Sharon
    Steel, the successor company, alleged that the creditors’ collective activity violated
    the Sherman Act. The Second Circuit described those claims as “border[ing] on
    the frivolous”: “While there can be little question that the Indenture Trustees
    engaged in concerted activity, Sharon has not shown any anticompetitive purpose
    or effect injurious to consumer welfare.” 
    Id. at 1052.
    In United Airlines, United
    leased some of its aircraft from a group of 
    lessors. 406 F.3d at 921
    . After United
    defaulted on the lease payments and entered bankruptcy, the lessors demanded that
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    United return the aircraft or cure its default. 
    Id. The court
    held that the
    coordinated effort of the lessors did not violate the antitrust laws. 
    Id. The same
    kind of coordination among creditors occurred here. Atlanticus
    announced a dividend and tentative plans to spin off part of its company. Although
    not insolvent, the company admitted that it had “no meaningful access to liquidity”
    and that the decline of the economy was a risk factor for investors. The
    announcement of the dividend paired with the company’s liquidity crisis and the
    collapse of the subprime lending market created uncertainty on the part of the
    noteholders. To address that uncertainty, the noteholders filed this lawsuit to
    enjoin the dividend on the ground that it amounted to a fraudulent transfer. And
    they collectively attempted to refinance the debt. These collective actions parallel
    the actions taken by the lenders in Sharon Steel and the lessors in United Airlines.
    All three groups of creditors already owned the debt, and they worked
    collaboratively to secure the repayment of that debt. This collective activity does
    not violate the Sherman Act.
    Atlanticus attempts to distinguish Sharon Steel and United Airlines on the
    ground that the collaborators in those cases were indenture trustees, not debt
    holders, but the Trust Indenture Act contemplates coordinated action by trustees
    and debt holders. The Act created trustees to serve as agents for debt investors and
    to aid in the enforcement of indentures because “concerted action by such
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    investors” could be “impracticable” due to “the wide dispersion of such investors
    through many States.” 15 U.S.C. § 77bbb(a)(1). The Act did not empower
    trustees to work collectively to the exclusion of the debt holders. Instead, it
    appointed trustees to work on behalf of debt holders. The text of the Act renders
    the actions of the trustees in Sharon Steel and United Airlines indistinguishable
    from the debt holders in this appeal.
    Every authority cited by Atlanticus to support its antitrust claim is
    distinguishable. Negotiations between a creditor and a debtor to refinance debt are
    different from negotiations between two parties not bound by an existing
    agreement who negotiate a sale of services, goods, or credit. Atlanticus cites
    Federal Trade Commission v. Superior Court Trial Lawyers Association, for
    example, but Trial Lawyers involved future contracts to represent indigent
    defendants. 
    493 U.S. 411
    , 415–16, 
    110 S. Ct. 768
    , 771–72 (1990) (“[A]bout 90
    percent of the [lawyers] refused to accept any new assignments.” (emphasis
    added)). Atlanticus also relies upon Klor’s v. Broadway-Hale Stores, Inc., which
    involved a refusal to deal, but that refusal was for future sales of radios, television
    sets, and other appliances. 
    359 U.S. 207
    , 213, 
    79 S. Ct. 705
    , 710 (1959).
    Atlanticus also cites Catalano, Inc. v. Target Sales, Inc., but that decision involved
    a group of wholesalers that ended the practice of giving credit to retail purchasers
    only for future retail purchases. 
    446 U.S. 643
    , 644–45, 
    100 S. Ct. 1925
    , 1926
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    (1980); see also United States v. Socony-Vacuum Oil Co., 
    310 U.S. 150
    , 181–89,
    
    60 S. Ct. 811
    , 826–29 (1940) (involving inflated purchases of gasoline not part of a
    long-term contract). None of the conspirators in Trial Lawyers, Klors, Catalano, or
    Socony-Vacuum Oil had an incentive to keep the plaintiffs financially afloat and
    maximize a return on a preexisting investment; the conspirators were in a take-it-
    or-leave-it position with no underlying obligations left to be repaid.
    B. The Noteholders Were Not Bound To Negotiate Exclusively as a Group.
    The presence of a secondary market does not distinguish this appeal from
    the decisions in Sharon Steel or United Airlines because the negotiations between
    the group of noteholders and Atlanticus were not the exclusive mechanism for each
    noteholder to sell its debt. Because each noteholder was free to accept the tender
    offer, resell the notes to Atlanticus on individually negotiated terms, sell the notes
    on the secondary market, or hold the notes until they matured, the group
    negotiations did not distort the secondary market. Exclusive agreements among
    potential competitors are dangerous, but when the noteholders acted together to
    secure their debt, they were securing their debt in an efficient manner, not in an
    exclusive manner.
    To illustrate this point, imagine a group of artists who agree to license their
    copyrights as a bundle of copyrights exclusively through a clearinghouse. This
    agreement is an exclusive agreement because no one artist can license his
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    copyright to a buyer except through the clearinghouse. The clearinghouse is the
    only seller of the copyrights and could artificially inflate the price of licenses. This
    exclusive agreement is an anticompetitive cartel.
    Next imagine a licensure regime that is not exclusive, but is no less efficient:
    an artist can license his copyright through the clearinghouse or individually sell a
    license to a buyer. That regime is not exclusive because each artist can negotiate
    with buyers outside of the clearinghouse. The possibility of one-on-one
    negotiations between the artist and a licensee disciplines the clearinghouse when it
    sets its prices because the clearinghouse cannot price the bundled licenses
    artificially high unless it wishes to go out of business. In this regime, the
    clearinghouse would likely price in the efficiency of a one-time purchase of the
    bundle of licenses, instead of many purchases of individual licenses, but that
    slightly higher price would not be artificially high. If the clearinghouse continues
    to exist, even though it is not the exclusive seller of copyright licenses, its
    continued existence suggests that the clearinghouse is a more efficient way to
    license copyrights. The clearinghouse is procompetitive.
    The nonexclusive license regime mirrors the facts of Broadcast Music, in
    which the Supreme Court ruled that not all agreements that look like price fixing
    are per se illegal price-fixing agreements under the Sherman 
    Act. 441 U.S. at 23
    24, 99 S. Ct. at 1564
    (“[T]he blanket license cannot be wholly equated with a
    20
    Case: 12-13467     Date Filed: 10/28/2013     Page: 21 of 23
    simple horizontal arrangement among competitors. . . . The individual composers
    and authors have neither agreed not to sell individually in any other market nor use
    the blanket license to mask price fixing in such other markets.”). Broadcast Music
    illustrates that many agreements that bring together competitors are
    procompetitive, and the cooperation among the noteholders is no exception.
    Collective action in capital markets is far from categorically anticompetitive.
    The Sherman Act has a role in maintaining efficient capital markets, but the Act
    does not curtail activity that is procompetitive. See Herbert Hovenkamp, Antitrust
    Violations in Securities Markets, 28 J. Corp. L. 607, 608–09 (2003) (“Its purpose
    is not to create a code of fair dealing or to protect little traders as such.”). In the
    securities context, for example, the Williams Act explicitly anticipates collective
    action by both tender offerors and offerees. 15 U.S.C. § 78n(d)(2) (“When two or
    more persons act as a partnership, limited partnership, syndicate, or other group for
    the purpose of acquiring, holding, or disposing of securities of an issuer, such
    syndicate or group shall be deemed a ‘person’ for purposes of this subsection.”);
    see also Kalamnovitz v. G. Heileman Brewing Co., Inc., 
    769 F.2d 152
    (3d Cir.
    1985) (stating that, in the context of a takeover, “[t]he antitrust laws simply were
    not designed to regulate this type of corporate power struggle”); Finnegan v.
    Campeau Corp., 
    915 F.2d 824
    , 828–30 (2d Cir. 1985) (concluding that rival
    bidders who collude to make a joint bid for a takeover are exempt from the
    21
    Case: 12-13467     Date Filed: 10/28/2013    Page: 22 of 23
    Sherman Act); 
    Hovenkamp, supra, at 620
    –21 (discussing procompetitive effects of
    joint bidding in securities purchases).
    And in this debtor-creditor context, the procompetitive effect of the
    noteholders’ collective activity is even more pronounced. Their collaboration to
    obtain the maximum repayment for the debt that they purchased has two
    procompetitive effects. The primary effect is that the debt holders have an
    incentive to keep the debtor solvent because the value of their investment in the
    debt depends on the debtor’s ability to pay its debts as they mature. This incentive
    prevents debt holders from driving up any refinancing demands to artificially high
    levels. If the debtor goes broke, the debt holders do not get paid. Even if a group
    of debt holders collectively demands an artificially high price for the debt, the
    group is not the exclusive mechanism for an individual debt holder to resell the
    debt it owns. This lack of exclusivity acts as a check on the collective demands of
    the group. Any individual debt holder can abandon the group and resell its debt to
    the debtor if it fears the group is pushing the debtor toward insolvency, and as debt
    holders abandon the group, the group either disbands or adjusts its demands to
    more reasonable terms. The secondary effect is that, when debt holders work
    collectively to achieve the maximum repayment for the debt they own, debt issuers
    can negotiate lower interest rates for future sales of debt. As a consequence, the
    credit market becomes cheaper for debtors. The Sherman Act plays no role in
    22
    Case: 12-13467      Date Filed: 10/28/2013    Page: 23 of 23
    policing collective activity where the effects of that collective activity are both
    procompetitive and a “redeeming virtue” of debt holders working together.
    III. CONCLUSION
    When debt holders collaborate to secure the debt that they already own, their
    actions are procompetitive and cannot constitute a per se violation of the Sherman
    Act. I agree with the majority opinion that res judicata bars this counterclaim, but I
    write separately to underscore that the noteholders’ collaboration was not per se
    illegal. The district court correctly concluded that the counterclaim failed as a
    matter of law.
    23
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 12-13467

Filed Date: 10/28/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/13/2015

Authorities (20)

Akanthos Capital Management, LLC v. Compucredit Holdings ... , 677 F.3d 1286 ( 2012 )

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Compucredit Holdings Corporation v. Akanthos Capital ... , 677 F.3d 1042 ( 2012 )

Shurick v. Boeing Co. , 623 F.3d 1114 ( 2010 )

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united-airlines-inc-and-the-official-committee-of-unsecured-creditors , 406 F.3d 918 ( 2005 )

ishmael-jaffree-mozell-hurst-jaffree-on-behalf-of-herself-and-all-persons , 837 F.2d 1461 ( 1988 )

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sharon-steel-corporation-plaintiff-appellant-cross-v-the-chase-manhattan , 691 F.2d 1039 ( 1982 )

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Falstaff Brewing Corp. v. New York Life Insurance , 513 F. Supp. 289 ( 1978 )

Broadcast Music, Inc. v. Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc. , 99 S. Ct. 1551 ( 1979 )

Catalano, Inc. v. Target Sales, Inc. , 100 S. Ct. 1925 ( 1980 )

United States v. Sioux Nation of Indians , 100 S. Ct. 2716 ( 1980 )

Klor's, Inc. v. Broadway-Hale Stores, Inc., Admiral ... , 79 S. Ct. 705 ( 1959 )

Federal Trade Commission v. Superior Court Trial Lawyers ... , 110 S. Ct. 768 ( 1990 )

Arizona v. California , 120 S. Ct. 2304 ( 2000 )

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